May 27, 2026 · 8-min read
5 Public-Domain Hymns Every Family Should Know
A short, durable list. Learn these five and you have a foundation that has carried the church for centuries.

The five public-domain hymns every family should know are Amazing Grace, It Is Well With My Soul, Be Thou My Vision, Holy Holy Holy, and Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing. All five are firmly in the public domain — free to print, copy and pass on — and each has lasted across centuries because it says something true and says it plainly.
A family hymn repertoire does not need to be large. A handful of hymns, learned well and sung often, will shape a household more than a long list half-remembered. More than free to share, these hymns have lasted — sung across centuries, traditions and continents — because each one says something that endures.
Here they are, with a little of what makes each worth knowing.
1. Amazing Grace (John Newton, 1779)
The most-sung hymn in the English language, and for good reason. Newton wrote it out of his own history as a slave-ship captain who came to faith slowly and painfully. "A wretch like me" is not poetry for Newton; it is autobiography. For a family — or a women's Bible study opening in song before the Word — Amazing Grace is a first lesson in grace itself: that mercy is not earned, and that no past is beyond it. (We tell Newton's full story in The Story Behind 'Amazing Grace'.)
2. It Is Well With My Soul (Horatio Spafford, 1873)
Spafford wrote this hymn after losing his four daughters in a shipwreck, passing over the very waters where they drowned. The refrain — "It is well, it is well with my soul" — is one of the most honest statements of faith under grief ever set to music. It is a hymn to teach children before they need it, so that the words are already in them when a hard day comes. It does not pretend the sorrow away; it sets the sorrow beside a deeper trust.
3. Be Thou My Vision (8th-century Irish; English translation 1905)
One of the oldest hymns still in common use, this began as an ancient Irish poem and reached English in the early twentieth century. Its great theme is attention: asking God to be the thing we look at first and value most — "riches I heed not, nor man's empty praise." For families and small groups alike, it is a gentle daily prayer about what we set our hearts on. Its age alone is worth teaching: when you sing it, you are joining a thread more than a thousand years long.
4. Holy, Holy, Holy (Reginald Heber, 1826)
A hymn built almost entirely from scripture — the song of the seraphim in Isaiah 6 and the worship of Revelation 4. Where the others tell a personal story, this one simply lifts its eyes. It teaches the word holy and what it means: that God is not merely better than us by degrees, but other, set apart, worthy of awe. It is a fine hymn to open a Bible study or a family worship time, because it begins where worship begins — with God himself.
5. Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing (Robert Robinson, 1758)
A hymn of gratitude that does not flinch from honesty. Its most famous line — "prone to wander, Lord, I feel it, prone to leave the God I love" — names the wandering heart out loud. That candour is exactly why it endures. It teaches that faith is not pretending to be steady, but returning, again and again, to the fount of every blessing. Pair it with a conversation about the word Ebenezer in the second verse, and you have a small Bible study built in.
How to begin
You do not need to teach all five at once. Choose one, sing it for a few weeks until it is in everyone, and then add the next. Learned this way, a family or a group can hold all five within a year — and have, by the end of it, a shared treasury that does not depend on a hymnal being open or a screen being on.
If you would like to study one with some depth rather than only sing it, our Hymns of the Faith study pairs hymns like these with the Scripture and history behind them. For a guided rhythm on the whole practice, we wrote a simple guide on how to lead a hymn study at home.
Begin with one. Sing it until it is yours.
Frequently asked questions
- What are five public-domain hymns every family should know?
- Amazing Grace, It Is Well With My Soul, Be Thou My Vision, Holy Holy Holy, and Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing. All five are firmly in the public domain, have lasted across centuries, and each says something true and plain that shapes a household.
- What does public domain mean for a hymn?
- A public-domain hymn is one whose words and tune are no longer under copyright, so they are free to print, copy, sing and share. Older hymns are generally public domain, which is part of why they are ideal for family worship and printed study.
- What is a good first hymn to teach my family?
- Amazing Grace is a strong first choice — it is the most-sung hymn in English, it teaches the meaning of grace, and its story is easy to tell. Choose one hymn, sing it for a few weeks until everyone knows it, then add the next.
- How many hymns should a family learn?
- A small, well-known repertoire matters more than a long list. Five hymns, learned deeply and sung often, will shape a household more than fifty half-remembered. A family can comfortably hold all five of these within a year by learning one at a time.
- hymn study
- family worship
- hymn history
- devotional
Related reading
- The Story Behind 'When I Survey the Wondrous Cross'The story behind When I Survey the Wondrous Cross: Isaac Watts, the father of English hymnody, wrote it in 1707, drawing on Galatians 6:14. Here is the hymn's history and meaning.
- The Story Behind 'What a Friend We Have in Jesus'The story behind What a Friend We Have in Jesus: Joseph Scriven wrote it around 1855 to comfort his mother, out of a life marked by deep loss. Here is the hymn's history and meaning.
- The Story Behind 'Abide with Me'The story behind Abide with Me: Henry Francis Lyte wrote it in 1847 as he was dying of tuberculosis, drawing on Luke 24:29. Here is the hymn's history and meaning.